Beating Nebraska at home last year was more fun [Marc-Gregor Campredon]

Nebraska 79, Michigan 59 Comment Count

Alex.Drain February 10th, 2024 at 8:37 PM

There is little to say tonight about Michigan and Nebraska in Lincoln, so this will be the shortest recap of the year. Michigan was on the road, meaning they were without leading point guard Dug McDaniel due to his ongoing away games suspension. Michigan with Dug McDaniel is a bad team. Michigan without Dug McDaniel is a horrendous team. The offense grinds to a halt without McDaniel, while the defense remains bottom of the barrel for a high major. That wasn't going to change against a feisty Nebraska team but even within that framing, this game was surprisingly ugly for large stretches. 

Nebraska led by as many as 30 in the first half at one point, going on two separate 13-0 runs against the Wolverines(!). They pounded Michigan on the offensive glass early and got more or less anything they wanted on offense for the first ~15 minutes, having scored 43 points with 5.5 remaining in the opening stanza. The Wolverines managed to lock back in and get a few stops to temporarily mute the Huskers' blazing offense, closing the half on an 8-0 run to avoid facing the largest halftime deficit any B1G opponent had ever faced against Nebraska since Big Red joined the conference (they trailed by 20, the record was 21). It goes without saying that if the most interesting thing going on in your game in the late first half is wondering how badly your team will trail at halftime, things have gone very wrong. 

To find positives in what was otherwise a debacle, Michigan showed some pride and didn't give up. They largely held their own in the second half, the teams trading scores and then a 12-2 Michigan run cut the lead to 15. Unfortunately there were only five minutes remaining by that point and ultimately the Nebraska lead never dipped under beyond that mark. Both teams closed the game with deep reserves/walk-ons on the floor. Terrance Williams II and Nimari Burnett stood out as players who gave it their all and kept working hard (Will Tschetter hit a couple threes too), but a brutal outing from Olivier Nkamhoua and Jaelin Llewellyn (4-22 combined), among the rest of the team, sunk the Wolverines. They shot 32.3% from the field, which was not enough to take advantage of Nebraska's offensive rhythm cooling off sharply after the first 15 minutes. 

Michigan is now 8-16 on the season and 3-10 in the B1G, dead last in the standings. This was Nebraska's first win over Michigan since Jan. 18, 2018, and only their second over the Wolverines since joining the conference. Michigan's next game, on Tuesday night, will be in Champaign against a ranked Illinois team, again without McDaniel. It is difficult to see the Maize & Blue winning that one, to put it lightly. The rest of this season is a battle of whether Michigan can climb out of the cellar, as they have not finished last in the conference in a men's basketball season since 1966-67. That game against Illinois on Tuesday is scheduled for 7:00 PM EST and will be broadcast on Peacock. 

[Click the JUMP for the box score... if you are a SICK person] 

Comments

KBLOW

February 10th, 2024 at 9:38 PM ^

The team had zero idea what to do with Nebraska's defense. None. And obviously, Howard and the other coaches didn't either, or cannot explain/coach those things if they did have any idea. 

And sure, Nebraska was hot and plays much better at home, but FSS our defense gave up too many easy shots and 2nd chance points and that is about effort. Ugh. 

HollywoodHokeHogan

February 10th, 2024 at 9:57 PM ^

This result is a bit deflating for those hoping some epic Juwan meltdown (slapgate redux) will force Warde to fire him. The team is so bad that I can’t see Howard getting upset enough about a loss to do anything silly.  

TheBlueAbides

February 10th, 2024 at 11:22 PM ^

Stopping shitting on Juwan. I agree it’s most likely time for him to go, but it has to be handled in a way that we don’t sever the relationship with anyone pre 1995 associated with Michigan basketball. Culture matters and part of that culture is the fab five and the 80s. It’s ok to say “let’s move on from Howard” without saying “fuck this clown” etc. You all think you love Michigan hoops more than him? You don't. This is a hard task but we need to find a way to part with him, respect his legacy as both a coach and one of our best players ever, and also move on. This fanbase at times is as toxic as the staff itself. I would love to get new young blood in here but basketball more than any other sport is going to be turbulent for non blue bloods in this modern era. Ride the wave and support the team, and in due time there will be Maize and blue skies. Go blue 

tybert

February 11th, 2024 at 11:56 AM ^

Went out to dinner with the wife, checked the score (we were down 20+ in the 1st half) and decided to check-out and enjoy dinner.

If Warde is really up for an extension (it all depends on the BoR who haven't made any stink about Ohio's NIL vs. UM), then he will consider it a voice of confidence that he keeps Juwan for one more year, just like the JH 2020. 

He will have all next year to evaluate mid-major coaches who could come in here and make it better. Just look at the Top 25 and those others receiving votes - there are at least 3-4 guys who Warde could hire away.

Warde may force his hand to change the staff. JB did the same after a rough mid 2010 decade team (that lost to NJ Tech). But JB had already taken us to the finals. 

My first experience with "bad" UM hoops play was my FR year 1981-82. That team started 0-13 in Frieder's 2nd year but had young talent (Eric Turner, Leslie Rockymore, and injured Tim McCormick) that would win the NIT 2 years later. This year's team and coaching have given me no confidence that they will do the same, but if WM has the backing of the BoR it doesn't matter.